Enneagram

The EnneagramCompiled by Bruce Sabalaskey

Introduction

The Enneagram is a popular New Age tool which has
found its way into Catholic practices, including parish classes and in retreat
programs. This article is a short summarized compilation of four authors who
have studied the Enneagram. They are Father Mitch Pacwa,
S.J., Msgr. William Smith, Dorothy Ranaghan, and Rick Kephart. See the excellent
references for details.

What is the Enneagram?

The Enneagram is a circular diagram on which personality types numbered one through
nine are symbolically represented at nine equidistant points on the circumference. The numbers are then connected by arrows in
significant patterns which point the way to health ("integration") or to neurosis
("disintegration"). Each human personality is said to fall
into one of these nine types. This number is said to reveal the hidden
motivation for everything a person does. Intelligence is given three centers:
thought, emotion, and instinct, which are always imbalanced. The result of this
imbalance is that a person's "true self" is always hidden
beneath a "false self". The Enneagram is supposed to enable a
person to gain knowledge of his true self, exposing the true motivations for
actions and illusions developed regarding himself and regarding how to deal with
the world. Msgr. Smith says:

"Each of the nine personality types (numbered 1 through 9) is described negatively by some compulsion, fixation, or basic driving force to avoid something unpleasant. This compulsion is seen as one's basic psychological orientation. To discover your number, you have to realize what you seek to avoid, what your compulsion
is."

The personality types and the animals symbolizing them are:

Personality
Number

Personality Type

Related Animal

1.

Perfectionist

terrier

2.

Care Giver

cat

3.

Achiever

peacock

4.

Artist

basset hound

5.

Observer

fox

6.

Team Player

rabbit

7.

Optimist

monkey

8.

Competitor

rhinoceros

9.

Peacemaker

elephant

Essentially the Enneagram is an occult and Gnosticpagan
self-centered system.

More and more frequently the Enneagram is sold as a " modern
psychological method" to make one "more effective in dealing with
others." The "spiritual" connection is downplayed and the secular
"business value" is emphasized. With modern "scientific"
principles espoused, who could argue with wanting "self-improvement?"

Origin of the Enneagram

First, the Enneagram is derived from a groups called the Sufis, who are a
mystical offshoot of Muslims that follow various pagan spiritualities, as will
be described. Two non-Catholic men, George Gurdjieff and Oscar Ichazo, were
primarily responsible for bringing this system into Western culture in modern
times.

Father Mitch Pacwa, S.J. says the following:

"The Enneagram, from the Greek ennea (nine) and gram (line drawing), is a system of classifying personality types based on the
figure of a circle with nine points on it, [each] connected by lines. Each point stands for an ego-type that has its own distinctive vice and
virtue. Each can get worse by moving against the arrow."

"I was taught the Enneagram in 1972 while a student in the Jesuit
theologate. We used it in our spiritual and social life. But we noticed we were typing people incorrectly, and interest faded.
"In the '80s, I saw an Enneagram industry develop, but the versions being taught were contradictory. So I did research. The
Enneagram is supposed to be ancient Sufi wisdom, thousands of years old. But
the
Sufis, who are Muslim mystics, aren't that old of a movement. The diagram itself can't be older than the 14th or 15th century. It was
discovered in the 1890s in Central Asia by a Greek-Armenian occultist named George
Gurdjieff. He got it from a secret brotherhood of Sufis
called the Naqshbandi, who were using it for numerological fortune-telling. Gurdjieff, a charlatan and a swindler who
was into gnosticism,
taught it to his disciples as a symbol of the cosmos. Gurdjieff died in 1949 but left followers. Oscar Ichazo, a Chilean who claimed to have
had out-of-body experiences since childhood and studied all sorts of psychic practices, learned the
Enneagram from such a group."

"In the 1960s, Ichazo devised a personality system of nine types -- each with its animal totem -- matched to the
Enneagram. Esalen Institute psychologist Claudio Naranjo, another admirer of Gurdjieff,
collaborated with him. Naranjo spread the Enneagram through Esalen classes."

Dorothy Ranaghan confirms the background. About Sufis she writes:

"There is much in the zeal, devotion and asceticism of Sufis that is
admirable. Yet, in contrast
to the contemplation and the yearning for holiness of the Muslim mystics of former ages,
contemporary Sufism, which claims over 40
million adherents, has become a mix of pantheism, magic and rationalism with a belief in
telepathy [ calling it projecting "baraka"], teleportation, foreknowledge,
transmigration of souls and a denial of a personal God."

Dorothy Ranaghan further confirms that George Gurdjieff was the man primarily responsible for transmitting the
Enneagram into the West. He was also into occult practices in a major way, which
influenced the present day New Age movement:

"[Gurdjieff's writings are] filled with descriptions
of planetary influences, astral bodies, clairvoyant and telepathic
experiments, and with explanations of the true significance of occult
interests such as 'kundalini' and the Tarot."

For Gurdjieff, the Enneagram had secret powers not particularly allied to personality
typology. "The Enneagram is a universal symbol," Gurdjieff believed. "All knowledge can be included in the
Enneagram and with the help of the Enneagram it can be interpreted."

Lastly, Fr. Pacwa writes about Oscar Ichazo:

"The occult also influenced Oscar Ichazo's life and
writings. At age six he began having out-of-body experiences, which led to his
disillusionment with the Church. He could not accept Catholic teachings on
Heaven or hell since he had been there and knew more about it than Christ and
the Church. Later he learned that living in one's ego was the real hell. To gain
control of his own consciousness, he studied Oriental martial arts, Zen, Andes
Indian thought, psychedelic drugs, shamanism, yoga, hypnotism and psychology. He
joined esoteric groups in Bolivia and Argentina and traveled to Hong Kong,
India and Tibet to study mysticism." [5]

Compatibility with Catholicism

Authentic Catholic study of self is rooted in becoming holy, that is
conforming as best as possible to Jesus Christ our Savior. While the Enneagram
focuses on "self-improvement" via human understanding, the Catholic
focuses on his or her littleness, weakness and total dependence on God's Grace.
Catholic "self-improvement" means "intimate union with
Christ" - the more in union we are with Him the more holy we are. In other
words, dying to self, decreasing so that God may increase within us. The support
and action of God via His Grace is totally missing from the Enneagram. Great
spiritual works by St. John of the Cross (Ascent
of Mt. Carmel and Dark Night of the Soul)
emphasize properly the top place that God has in our "self-improvement"
towards holiness. The
Enneagram is totally self-centered - that is based on pure human ego. As with
other dissenter systems, holiness is also completely absent from the Enneagram, which
instead focuses on ego and compulsions. Also noticeably absent is the need for
the Sacraments of the Church on the path to holiness. The Catechism of the
Catholic Church clearly tells us:

CCC #2013 "All Christians in any state or walk of life are called to the
fullness of Christian life and to the perfection of charity." [Lumen
Gentium 40 ß 2] All are called to holiness: "Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is
perfect." [Mt 5:48]

In order to reach this perfection the faithful should use the strength dealt out to them by Christ's gift, so that ... doing the will of the Father in everything, they may wholeheartedly devote themselves to the glory of God and to the service of their neighbor. Thus the holiness of the People of God will grow in fruitful abundance, as is clearly shown in the history of the Church through the lives of so many
saints. [Lumen Gentium 40 ß 2]

CCC #2014 Spiritual progress tends toward ever more intimate union
with Christ. This union is called "mystical" because it participates in the mystery of Christ through the sacraments - "the holy
mysteries" and, in him, in the mystery of the Holy Trinity. God calls us all to this intimate union with him, even if the special graces or
extraordinary signs of this mystical life are granted only to some for the sake of manifesting the gratuitous gift given to all.

The origin of the Enneagram certainly does not come from Catholic sources. Besides its occult roots,
the Enneagram is built upon pagan beliefs. Therefore, like horoscopes, the Enneagram
is absolutely incompatible with the Catholic Faith.

Father Pacwa says:

"I have two criticisms [of Enneagram]. First, it's theological nonsense, suffused
with Gnostic ideas. For instance, the nine points of the Enneagram are called the "nine faces of God," which become nine demons turned upside
down. No one should speak that way. . . . And the way the Enneagram is taught is Pelagian -- self-salvation through a man-made technique, not
by God's grace."

"Secondly, this is a psychological system that hasn't been tested by professional psychologists. We have no independent evidence
that it's true. As a result, Enneagram experts -- who aren't necessarily aware of the occult aspects -- are making up descriptions as
they go along. It's irresponsible to pass this off as true."

"The basic premise of the Enneagram is that there are nine and only nine personality types; this is simply given as true, it is nowhere demonstrated as proven. To my knowledge, there are no scientific studies to determine whether
Enneagram theory can be integrated with other typologies; but that would not really bother some advocates one way or the
other... The more you read about it, the more it begins to resemble a college-educated horoscope; and that is not compatible with Catholic doctrine or
practice. ...."

"As a tool for spiritual direction, it seems to me most deficient, even
dangerous. The
Enneagram is really built on a theology (?)-perhaps ideology-of self-renewal and self-regeneration that is a far cry from (perhaps contradiction of) the Gospel teaching: 'Amen, amen, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat; but if it dies, it produces much fruit' (John
12:24)"

Ranaghan also observes that Christian proponents of the Enneagram encourage practitioners
to deny their Christian standards to
deal with their problems. Promoting sin to obtain so-called
"self-improvement" is the exact opposite of Catholic teaching.
Holiness, the Catholic "self-improvement," is based on removal of sin
from our lives.

"Progress in the Enneagram seems to be movement from one sin type to another sin
type. Persons who are 2s (the 'nervous breakdowns' in the world) need, according to
Sister Mary Helen Kelley, to 'come to conscious
selfishness' for redemption. Sister Barbara Metz states that 'to come to wholeness . . .
the 6 (the loyalist) needs to walk into the
darkness of deviance and disobedience.'"

Deceptive Vocabulary

Enneagram terminology sounds Christian, but really is not. This is the same tactic that dissenters have used
today, whereby a word's
meaning was twisted to sound proper to deceive the reader. Ranaghan observes:

"Redemption, for example, does not mean,
among Sufis, the saving action of God in our lives, but 'return from ignorance.' The very worst thing, according to Sufi doctrine, is
'not
sin, but ignorance.' All Gnosticism flows from this premise."

Kephart offers a more detailed analysis exposing the pagan
mimicking of the Catholic Faith:

Catholics using the Enneagram talk about things like saints
and sin and faith and "fruits of the spirit". Using these words makes
it sound legitimate. But they are only adapting these terms to the Enneagram, by
giving them different definitions.

The word "saint" is used in the Sufi
religion, but can have an entirely different meaning. It has nothing whatever to
do with holiness. A Sufi "saint" ("wali") is a person who
is illuminated to Reality. This is the word used in the Enneagram (even by
Catholics): a "saint" is a person who overcomes his false self and
knows and acts according to his true self.

The word "sin" is used a lot, but with a
new definition. Sin is not a deliberate transgression of God's law. The word
is redefined into personality traits that separate people from God or their real
selves. Sin is the sinister motivation everybody has for everything they do,
a part of human personality. It must be accepted and brought under control. The
number assigned to a person by the Enneagram indicates what their one "root
sin" is and will always be. "Sin" is also called
"addiction".

"Original Sin" has nothing to do with Adam
and Eve. Their "Original Sin" is a psychological condition,
meaning that a person is never at any time in his life undamaged or free, but is
always exposed to harmful forces. It describes the conditions in the environment
which cause the imbalance among the three intelligence centers.

Another term used in the Enneagram is "fruits of
the spirit". These have nothing to do with the Holy Spirit. In the
Enneagram, the fruits of the spirit are good inclinations a person gets
according to his number in the Enneagram.The "Holy Spirit"
according to the Enneagram is not a Person at all: He is a synonym for
"power" or "energy" in Enneagram spirituality (unlike
the Father and Son, who are recognized as real persons).

"Prayer" is talked about as part of the
Enneagram, but their definition of prayer has nothing to do with God: prayer
is absorbing elements from the environment into oneself, or projecting oneself
into the environment, or delving into Nothingness. "Redemption"
in the Enneagram has nothing whatever to do with Christ. It is the same as
maturity, which is what they call freedom from one's "false self"
to one's "true self". This true self is also called the
"soul", another redefined word. Even "Heaven" is
given a new definition: it is only a symbol for the perfection of freedom
from one's false self to one's true self.

Two other terms which are given new definitions according
to the Enneagram are "faith" and "obedience".
According to their definitions, a person cannot have true faith unless he has
doubts. A person cannot be truly obedient unless he refuses if he disagrees;
in fact, in the very act of defiance, a person is being truly obedient
according to the Enneagram's definition of obedience.

Conclusion

The Enneagram has found a home in many Catholic places, both in parishes and
retreat centers. Many religious support and teach the Enneagram. Unfortunately, as we
learn from Church history, being religious does not prevent a person from
following falling away from the Faith (apostasy) or
following error (e.g. heresy) - in fact many Bishops
have started heresies in the past.

Best would be to follow the advice of Pope John Paul II who said on Nov. 1st,
1982: "Any method of prayer is valid insofar as it is inspired by Christ and leads to Christ who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life (John
14:6)." The
Enneagram, an occult pagan tool, is focused on self and therefore leads us away
from the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Have nothing to do with the Enneagram.